The English Reformed Church is one of the oldest buildings in Amsterdam,
situated right in the centre of the city. It is home to an
English-speaking congregation which is affiliated to the Church of
Scotland and to the Dutch Reformed Church. It comes under the Church of
Scotland's Presbytery of Europe, and is also known as the Scots Kirk in
Amsterdam. The current minister, John Cowie, is presbytery clerk.
The address of the church, Begijnhof 48, already indicates its
origins. The Begijnhof, an enclosed courtyard, was a 14th-century
residence for the sisterhood of the Beguines, and the church was
originally established as their chapel. For this reason, the church is
invisible from the street and can only be discovered by entering the
courtyard through an inconspicuous archway.
As with other city churches, the keys of the chaple were
surrendered to the Municipality when Amsterdam sided officially with the
Prince of Orange and formally adopted Calvinist doctrines in 1578. In
1607, the church was re-opened for worship when the Municipality
presented it to the English-speaking Protestants living in the city.
Since then, services in English have continued practically without
interruption to the present day.
The dissenting English Protestants in Amsterdam in the early days
of the English Church included a number, who, within a few years of
their arrival in the city, left to form a separate congregation in
Leiden and to sail via Delfshaven and Plymouth (in England) on the
Mayflower to the New World in 1620. These Pilgrim Fathers are remembered
in stained glass and memorials both within and outside the church.
In 1817, ownership of the building was formally passed to the
congregation, by then known as the English Reformed Church ("ERC"),
which holds a regular Sunday morning service as well as other services
and activities in the church. The ERC currently has 320 members from 30
nationalities. The church can seat 385 and attracts congregations of
over 250 on a regular basis.
Since the late 1970s, the church has provided Amsterdam with an
important platform for the performance of chamber music of all periods
and styles with over 70 concerts a year. In particular, it has given
many young artists the opportunity to launch their careers. The Academy
of the Begijnhof, founded by a former church organist, is now one of
Amsterdam's premier baroque orchestras.